of
Sample: Sample No. 79WG184
Locality: Field No. 79WG184
Description: Long. 154o 53'40" W., Lat. 62o 13'02" N. SE1/4 of SE1/4 of NE1/4 of NE1/4 of Sec. 31, T. 25 N., R. 30 W., McGrath A-4 quadrangle. (description from letter (dated August 25, 1980) from R.B. Blodgett to A.R. Ormiston).
Location: Alaska Quadrangle: Mc Grath A-4
Township&Range: T25N R30W Section: SE1/4, SE1/4, NE1/4, NE1/4 Sec. 31
Lat.: 62o13'02 " Long.: 154o53'40 "
Reference
Title: letter ,  1981
[Note by R.B. Blodgett, the day of this letter is uncertain, it was sent undated by Rietschel and received by me in March 1981]

Siegfried Rietschel
Geology Department
Field Museum of Natural History

Robert B. Blodgett
Department of Geology
Oregon State University
Corvallis, Oregon 97331

Dear Mr. Blodgett,

thank you very much for yours letters of March 12 and 19, which I found here, coming back from a two weeks excursion; although the material you've sent arrived safely and I looked at it yesterday, but I found no Scribroporella in it.

So I send back to you the six boxes with undetermined fossils as well as one box specimen of Coelotrochium (79RB4). The fossils, which look a little like Scribroporella are mostly amphiporoids.

I take now with me to Germany the six boxes with Coelotrochium (79RB6, 79RB8, 79RB9, 79RB11, 79RB12 and 79WG184). They should be safe from damage, for I take them in my hand baggage during the flight.

My work at Field Museum seems to be very fruitful and I am not so delighted to leave this week, for there is still a lot of half done work, which I have to finish in near future. But that is in the normal experience of a Museum visit.

So I wish you all the best for your work and your exams.

yours sincerely

Siegfried Rietschel

home address: Landessammlungen fuer Naturkunde,
Postfach 4045,
7500 Karlsruhe 1
WEST GERMANY

Report by: Siegfried Rietschel
Referred by: Robert B. Blodgett
Age: No Data
Formation:Cheeneetnuk Limestone (Revised; Robert B. Blodgett, 12/11/2007 ; formation named subsequent to this report)
Occurrence(s)
No. Group Name Qty Notes
1 Algae Coelotrochium

Title: letter ,  1981 (01/21)
(note: Lutke's name has umlaut over u)

Technische Hochschule Darmstadt
Geologisch-Palaontologisches Institut
Schnittspahnstrasse 9
D-6100 Darmstadt

January 21th, 1981

To:
Dr. R.B. Blodgett, Dept. of Geology, Oregon State University, Corvallis/Oregon 97331 U.S.A.

Dear Dr. Blodgett,

The slides with dacryoconarids and tentaculities from mid-Eifelian beds in your dissertation area in Alaska have arrived in good condition. The preservation is not too good, often the shells are corroded or encrusted, some are broken so that the apex is missing. A definitive determination is therefore not possible - which is a pity because every good information on dacs from America would be valuable. The following may be said: (see faunal lists)

There are no biostratigraphical indications that this material would be better than your conodonts or goniatites.

Do you want the slides back or can they stay here for a while in case I need comparison with my Nevada material?

Please give my regards to Dr. Boucot.

Yours sincerely,

Frithjof Lutke

Report by: Frithjof Lutke
Referred by: Robert B. Blodgett
Age: No Data
Formation:Cheeneetnuk Limestone (Revised; Robert B. Blodgett, 12/11/2007 ; formation named subsequent to this report)
Occurrence(s)
No. Group Name Qty Notes
1 Tentaculites Uniconus sp.
2 Tentaculites Tentaculites sp. (? n. sp.)

Title: letter ,  1981 (08/10)
Amoco Production Company 4502 East 41st Street
Post Office Box 591
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74102
Research Center

August 10, 1981

Robert B. Blodgett
Department of Geology
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR 97331

Dear Bob:

I have completed my examination of the Alaskan trilobite material from the McGrath Quadrangle of Alaska. Certainly the most interesting result is the presence of the genus Camsiella represented by a new species in at least two of the collections. Heretofore this genus has been known only from the Hume Formation, District of MacKenzie, Northwest Territories. Its presence in these Alaskan collections would tend to strengthen the Hume affinities of other faunal groups from the McGrath Quadrangle collections would support an Eifelian age. I have enclosed a xerox of a photo of this new species of Camsellia which you might be interested to compare with Plate 1, Figures 12 and 13 my 1976 paper. The new species differs from truncata in having a few more axial rings and a slight post-axial notch (larval notch) in the posterior border. Another trilobite worthy of note is the Scutelliud in sample A-1217. The development of the glabellar furrows is consistent with a Frasnian age, but this apparently represents a new genus distinguished by glabellar proportions. There is nothing comparable to this taxon in the literature. This new Scutelliud has a distinctive glabellar shape as reflected by the ratio of anterior to basal glabellar width which is 1.38 for the new genus as compared with rations of two other Frasnian species, costatum at 2.22 or thomasi at 2.20.

The identifiability of the McGrath Quadrangle material is, of course, limited by the relatively poor state of preservation. Thus the comparison to setosa is simply the best I can do with the material available. Were more and better preserved material available, I might be able to diagnose this as a new and distinctive taxon. Here are the identifications I have been able to make: (see faunal list):

I hope that this information will be some use to you and would be happy to look at any more material you may have available from the Lower and Middle Devonian of Alaska.

Best regards,

Allen R. Ormiston

Report by: Allen R. Ormiston
Referred by: Robert B. Blodgett
Age: Eifelian (Eifelian (based on other fauna, comment by R.B. Blodgett))
Formation:Cheeneetnuk Limestone (Revised; Robert B. Blodgett, 12/11/2007 ; formation named subsequent to this report)
Occurrence(s)
No. Group Name Qty Notes
1 Trilobites Dechenella cf. D. setosa two tail, cheek, hypostome
2 Trilobites (Silicified) Dechenella cf. D. setosa cheek and tail fragments
3 Trilobites Basidechenella? sp. one tail
4 Trilobites Camsellia? sp. one tail